Are you truly free as a bird?
Sometimes i forget that Nikolai still doesn't know Fyodor is alive :D
TRASH SUGAR MAGIC
â á´Ęá´á´á´á´Ę 10: Ęá´ę°Ęá´á´á´ÉŞá´É´ęą
â nikolai gogol x fem!reader
â mature content, angst, barely mild fluff | words: 9.2k
â ao3 | spotify | main menu
âDad⌠Iâm scaredâŚâ
Your small hand is desperately clinging to his jacket as you try to follow him through the bigger crowd. People around you are much taller, much bigger and much scarier. A speck of an antâyou feel like that is your point of view right now, for a tiny young girl who stands average at an adultâs waist height.Â
âDadâ Daddy! Donât walk too fastâ!â Your breath hitches when your hair is gripped hard and you are yanked to his side. You whimper, tears brimming again as he roughly grabs your hand and practically drags you to the bridge.Â
Boats with people in poor and depressing conditions are a sight here at the shore.Â
âW-Where are we going?â You ask again, scared. Big men holding guns, masked people counting money, packages traded and exchanged. Frustrated groans leave your fatherâs mouth before he crouches in front of you. His calloused hand grips your jaw, hard.Â
âYou little⌠I need you to shut the hell up and do not ask any fucking thing. You know too much, youâre gonna die. You ask too much, youâre gonna die. Nobody cares about your goddamn questions.â
He shakes your puffed face, eyes swollen with tears, nose stifled with snot.Â
âNobody. Cares.â
âHey, you okay?â
You lift your head and glance at the door. Your kidnapper is standing there and his lips twitch to force himself to smileâonly for that attempt to be buried away. What is the point of smiling anyway?Â
âYou didnât even eat your coco pops yet⌠Itâs past lunchtime.â He says softly as he steps towards you, sitting down right next to you. Despite sitting at the edge of the bed, your body is slumped horriblyâposture goes to hellâand your head is hanging low.Â
âI donât feel like eatingâŚâ You reply to him. Your voice cracks a little, most likely due to the lack of water. You have not eaten well for the past two days. When your stomach grumbles, you only nibble on some plain bread you found on the dining table.Â
âYou said that but you know your body is starving, right?â Nikolai says.Â
âI am hungry⌠I just donât feel like eating.âÂ
â⌠It happened to the best of us.â He replies before he also goes silent, just sitting right next to you without any word lingering in the air.Â
One minute.Â
Two minutes.Â
âWas it the loan shark who killed him?â You finally turn your head towards him. Nikolai does not smile as his mismatched eyes pierce straight into yours. He bites his inner cheek before he averts his gaze away.Â
âNo. He really did shoot himself.â
âWho told you that?â
âViktor. Even the loan sharks did not know he killed himself.â Nikolai says. âForensic said they found a bowl of charcoal in the motel room he resided in. They suspected that he was trying to poison himself with carbon monoxide, but maybe he thought otherwise and used a gun on himself instead.â He tells you, tone as solemn as your own.Â
âDo you know why he killed himself?â
â⌠No idea, love. They also suspected that he could not enter Belarus, which is why he did what he did. Besides, the bad guys your father was indebted to were coming for him before he committed. It was only a matter of hours.âÂ
You tear away your eyes from him before staring at your lap. The blue nail polish on your nails are peeled offâhalf of them, anyway. And your thumb continues to scratch your index fingernail, getting rid of the colour.Â
âWere you the one who told them about his whereabouts?â
Silence. You do not even look at the man beside you. But his answer is not something unexpected.Â
âIâm sorry.âÂ
âis all he says.Â
You do not realise you have been biting your lips until they tremble, begging to be released from the intensity of your sentiment. It is only until you feel your eyes are burning againâburn more and more as you blink fast.
You hastily rub your eyes but you cannot hold back a sniffle. Facing away from him, you murmur, âItâs okay. Itâs not your fault. I wasnât thinking right⌠Iâm the dumb one. I thought you were different.â
He says your name, but his voice is tugged with strings of dolour itself. Syllables are not clearâjust a crumpled word. You cover your ears, retreating to your shell as you shrink and shrinkâfeeling smaller and more humiliated than before. You shake your head.
Hiding.Â
His hand reaches out to you but before the slightest touch can ever land, the door is knocked. You cannot see but from the corner of your eyes, you notice the shaky uncertainty in his quiver as he curls his fingers into a fist and retracts his hand away from you. Far far away.Â
He does not say anything. He leaves the room and soon after, you hear the unlock.
â âĄ
The grocery bags from different stores are still unopened. A bowl of Coco Pops cereal is still untouched and there is already a plate of warm quick lunch beside it. The chair that is supposed to be filled with a person is empty.Â
Nikolai stares at that emptiness.Â
Even his meal does not feel fulfilling. He already gives up eating his lunch after two spoonfuls of it. He knows the meal he prepared will not be touched again and yet he still prepared itâin hopes that you might come out when he is there in the kitchen, sit in front of him and take your spoon as you tell him your thoughts of the universe.Â
But his house has gone empty.Â
Just like what it was one month ago before he brought in a stray flower he plucked from the street.Â
He learned more from the news and his friend about your fatherâs suicide. There was a receipt of him buying a bag of charcoal and another receipt of him buying cigarettes and a lighter. Forensic suspected that he intended to die by poisoning his system by creating a hazard in the motel room.Â
But ultimately, the quickest and most painless method became his choice.Â
He saw the state of your fatherâs dead bodyâgiven by Viktor who managed to access uncensored photographs from a database. Bullet wound through the head, specifically on his mouth and throat. He was lying face down in his pool of blood.Â
Gruesome pictures are not something foreign to him. Hell, he kills people for a living too. He has done worse. He skinned a man alive, he poured corrosive poison directly on someoneâs head, he made an entire body, save for the head, burst into a mess of flesh and bloodâNikolai has seen and done it all.Â
But there is a bitterness when seeing your fatherâs picture.Â
If he were his younger selfâcrazier, mayhapsâhe would have printed that photo and flaunted it in front of your eyes while you were crying for your daddy.Â
âSee, see! Yes, I made your dad kill himself! Arenât you happy now, baby? No oneâs gonna hurt you anymore, right? You should be thankful to me. Look at it, look at it! See these horrors with your own eyes!â
Perhaps he would say that, taunting you.Â
But he is not. He does not have the desire to. He does not even think about mentioning his death if you never hug and cry on him for minutes on a street, rained with light snow.Â
Nikolai finally stands up from the chair. He leaves his unfinished food and walks towards the bedroom. He peeks inside, seeing you sit silently on the edge of the bed, consumed with your own thoughts. A shadow is clearly looming over you. His lips part open but close too soon when he thinks back on his decision.Â
Two days. Two days you have been like this. Quiet, with only less than fifty words a day to him.Â
âYes.â âNo, thank you.â âOkay.â âIâm not hungry.â âI will eat later.â âIâm going to sleep.â
Nikolai despises this small talkâthey were barely a talk. His world has gone quiet again, just like the snowy street outside. The evening sky is grey and gloomy, just like his apartment right now. The little bird has stopped chirping, leaving him with no melody to harmonise him. The stray flower he picked has withered, petals falling one by one.
He approaches you and finally sits down beside you after a long while of giving you your needed space. He notices how you slightly flinch at his presence and his eyes hardenâWhat? What are you thinking right now? What are you thinking of me right now?Â
âWas it the loan shark who killed him?â You ask. He does not realise he has been holding his breath until he can finally exhale in relief after hearing more of your voiceâthis time it is not just repeating the same phrases but you actually talked.Â
You talk and he indulges in it.Â
Nikolai answers your questions and tells you what he knows from the information he has gathered himself. He does not wish to keep them from your knowledge but he does not intend to straightaway tell you either. If you wish to know more, you can always count on himâthat is what he wanted.Â
Until,Â
âWere you the one who told them about his whereabouts?â
He tenses, words are boiling in the brim of his throat and yet nothing comes out. They are not even trying to form a comprehensible sentenceâjust an abundance of things he thinks he could and can say. He should pick one, decide on one and yet nothing sounds right. His finger points on one and his brain diverts it away and his heart pushes it down. Yes, no, not me, him, her, she did it, he did, I know who, I donât know, sorry, sorry, sorryâ
âIâm sorry.â
It feels right. It is right.
âItâs okay. Itâs not your fault. I wasnât thinking right⌠Iâm the dumb one. I thought you were different.â
No. I am not the same as them. Youâre not dumbâI fucking am. I am not like them. I am different. I am not the same. I am not.
Nikolai does not realise it when he starts to clench his fist. He despises being compared to normalityâhells, that is one of the very reasons he defied the norm by dressing up as a loud clownish jester. He is not the same as any other peopleâhe is aware of his cage, unlike all of them. He wonders who you are comparing him with. The other rancid killers? The other ugly kidnappers? The other heartless murderers?Â
He is not like them.
Your sniffles are rusty needles, pricking his heart deeper and deeper especially when that is the only response you give after he calls your name. It jabs, it spikes, it hurts. The rust only spreads more dread.
When your body shrinks to its cocoon, his lips open again, wanting to tell you to stop. When your hands cover your own ears, his own pair twitches, wanting to grab your wrists and pull them away so you can hear his voice. You are hiding from him. And Nikolai does not like it. He hates it.
His hand reaches up to you.
Knock, knock, knock!
His hand halts in the air. He does not remember calling or expecting any visit. He wishes it is not one of the loan sharks, trying to take you away from him. Not now. Not yet. Not ever.
âI am going to check it.â âHe does not say that. He could not. You are not even looking at him, not even wanting to talk anymore. This is not right. This is not how both of you work. Gaze should be shared and yet you are facing away, staring at the dirt in the corner instead of him.
He gets up and walks to the door. He unlocks it and opens it slightly, to see who is behind it. Two faces he does not expect, especially when his relationship with one of them is as sour as a pair of divorced parents.Â
âWe brought food,â Viktor says.
âViktorâŚâ
âYou and I need to talk, darling. Now. I wonât accept any answer or Iâll literally commit arson in this building tonight.â He scowls. Once Nikolai finally opens the door wider, Nastasya pushes him aside and steps into his house uninvited. She does not even spare him a look. But the way her hand shoves him, he can only guess how high her anger is towards him.
âGeez, you are more frustrating to deal with than before. All grumpy and shit. Told you to go to therapy but youâre too prideful for that. Therapy is cheaper than coming to you, you know that, asshat?â Viktor huffs, crossing his arms. He glares at Nikolai up and down, snorting scornfully. âNot gonna dwell in guilt, huh? Whatâs with that face?â
Nikolai does not say anything as he stares at the floor for a moment. âGive me a minute. Weâre gonna talk downstairs.â
â âĄ
âWhy are you not eating lunch?â
You jump slightly at the familiar voice. You turn to the door, seeing Nastasya holding a bowl of stale coco pops. âYouâre not hungry? Viktor and I even bought more food for you. Not for⌠that clown, though. Heâs pissing me off.â She grumbles as she walks towards you with the cereal. She sits beside you, offering you your âbreakfastâ.
You shake your head. âNot hungry.â
And your stomach grumbles. Loudly.
âI hope thatâs not fart,â She says before she grabs your hand and places the bowl on it. You look at her, taking in her appearance todayâplain grey tank top and jeans, black fur jacket and her cross necklace. Her lipstick is a little smudgy but you are not going to point that out. Your eyes look away and travel to the bowl of coco pops.
âI donât think this is edible anymore.â
âYouâre right. Thatâs why we have other food. Come on, weâre not going to let you be malnourished.â She says before she takes your arm and gets up. Her hold on you is quite firm and you have no choice other than to follow her. Both of you step out and you instinctively look around the house.
âHeâs with Viktor. Outside.â Nastasya says. âItâs just you and me in the house.â
âAre you watching over me?â
She shakes her head before she sits down at the dining table. âNo. Vitya wanted to talk to Nikolai alone.â
âWhy did you follow along?â
Nastasya stares at you and she says nothing. She just taps the spot on the table in front of her, gesturing to you to sit down. You obey, sitting down on your usual chair. In front of you is a plate of untouched meals. It is supposed to be your lunch.
âYou wanna eat that or the food we bought for you?â Nastasya asks before she pushes the plastic bag containing food takeaways towards you. âPick whichever you want.â
âI donât feel like eatingâŚâ
âI know, but you must eat.â You are about to protest but Nastasya hisses once and you immediately take one of the food takeaways from the bag. You reach the provided cutlery from the bag as well and begin to half-heartedly stir the noodles. You eat the noodles, but your pace is extremely weak and slow as you pick one strand by one strand.
The smell of tobacco hits your nose and you glance up, seeing Nastasya huff the smoke to the side, away from you. Her eyes are blank as they are fixated on the lit cigarette, watching the fire devouring the white paper bit by bit. Her other hand is twirling her necklace.
âHow do you feel?â She suddenly asks. You lift your head, one hand fiddles with the hem of yourâwell, Nikolaiâsâshirt. You eye her, confused. She sighs softly. âHow do you feel these days?â She repeats again.
Your gaze falls on the noodles. God, you really do not have the spirit to even chew a strand of it. Mindlessly nudging the noodles with the fork, you let out a heavy breath.
âWeird, somehow.â You say. âMy father⌠um⌠well, I think you already knew. He died.â A pause. âI feel a little sad about it. I mean, he isâ was⌠not a good person. Very not good. I knew he wouldn't come to my aid from the beginning. He never even cared when I did not come home for a night because I had to sleep in the bar for warmth. He stole my money, he dragged me here and there to run away⌠Said if people got me, heâll be in trouble.â
âHeâs a bad person⌠And I think I am not supposed to feel sad about it. I shouldnât even feel surprised that he left me all the way almost out of the country. And yetâŚâ Your vision is blurry as you feel warm tears start to drip over your eyes. Your lips are hanging open, seeking the words that you could put to complete the puzzles in your mind. âYet⌠Yet, I⌠I feel disappointed.â
âItâs like I still have some hope, somewhere, that my father may still care just a bit about me. That my father is a father. But⌠he died now⌠He did it to himself⌠Left me here across the country⌠With⌠bad peopleâŚâ You look down at your hands, not realizing how much you have scratched your skin as if to direct your pain elsewhere.Â
âI justâŚâ Irises tremble. â⌠feel fucking horrible.â
Your head jolts up towards Nastasya. âDoes that make sense? I-I feel disappointed that he ran away so far instead of coming to help me but⌠but itâs not really something I did not expect. I know he wonât come but somehow⌠I still hoped.â Your voice is too shaky and it is only a matter of seconds that your whimper will slip. âAnd now I lost⌠a lot. My childhood, my mother, my job, my hope, my lifeâŚâ
Nastasya stares blankly at the table before she presses the cigarette onto the ashtray. âI felt the same way too,â She says. âWhen my mother died, I felt exactly what you feel. She killed herself too, remember?â Her voice is quiet and solemn. âI felt horrible and sad and disappointed too when I lost her. Although I shouldâve been the happiest girl in town because she was a massive bitch. Youâre making sense, girl. Your head is making sense of your heart.â She leans forward a bit, reaching just enough to wipe away your tears. âNo shame in that. Iâve cried over a horrible person too.â
You are already crying again, sniffing and weeping. âThen⌠why am I grieving? Why did you grieve?â
âI didn't grieve for my mother. You don't grieve for your father. You grieve for the little daughter who lost it all.â
â âĄ
âAlright, so where do you want to begin?â
Nikolai glares at Viktor as the man chugs on his soda. Both of them are just sitting on the staircase at the back door of the apartment building. Nobody really walks through here and there are two vending machines nearby.
âWhat do you mean?â Nikolai replies, grumpy.
âOur talk! Do you think Iâm here to hoo-haa with you?â Viktor huffs. Nikolai sighs before he flicks open his can of soda and drinks it.
âI apologise,â Nikolai says. âI said bad things to you and caused you to complain to two different women.âÂ
âMm-hm, apology accepted. That sarcasm at the end is not accepted though.â Viktor replies before he puts down his soda and bites a cigarette before lighting it up. âYou know what will happen now, right?â
âYeahâŚâ Nikolai mumbles. âIâm pretty sure the loan sharks are on their way here now. They know where we are based.â He says before his eyes watch a flock of ravens in the sky, some landing on the electrical pole, some on the snowy ground.
âI havenât replied to them, you know? The middleman already asked for her but I said nothing⌠yet.â Viktor says as he smokes. âJust feel bad for the girl. She just lost her only family and now sheâs gonna get taken away. Just wanna give her some time to mourn for her daddy.â He continues.Â
âI think she hates me already,â Nikolai sighs as he brings his knees closer to his body, hands frustratingly clasping his own head. âFuck.âÂ
âWell, why does it matter to you?â Viktor snorts. âYou donât care about her, right? I thought you wanted her to leave you.âÂ
Nikolai glances at his friend. âShut up.â
âNo, letâs talk about this, Kolyushka.â Viktor scowls as he turns his head to Nikolai. He frowns, displeased. âFrankly, I donât understand whatever you say about free will and stuff. But I sure think I am free as fucking pigeon right now. I have a stable job, I have a place to live, I can get discounted food, I went to therapy, I have my girl NastyushkaâI think my life is so content right now. And I have never felt freer.âÂ
âYou know why? Because I am happy, Nikolai. I do not deny happiness and joy because of an absurd idea. Sure, I can appreciate your ideal philosophically but you are dwelling in depression and misery. Dare I say, you are purposely caging yourself.âÂ
Nikolai bites his lips. âHappiness is stillââ
âIâm talking, sir.â Viktor flicks his fingers, cutting him off. âYeah, yeah, happiness is brainwashing or control or whatever. But so is sadness, is it not? So is guilt. So is despair. So is vengeance. So is hope.â He pauses. âJust let yourself be human once. Your pursuit is nothing but unjust and tragic. That road leads you to either death or a loop.â
âI may not understand how exactly you want to be truly free, if we push out suicide from the equation. I may not even understand you fully as a friend. But I still care, you know? Iâve known you for more than ten years.â Viktor stops, taking a long drag of his cigarette. âSo, spill it. Donât hide things from me. I am smart too. In a way. I guess.â
Nikolai stares blankly at the ground. He rubs his face, groaning into his palm. âI know she likes me. In⌠that way.â He halts before he looks away as he feels heat creeping all over his nerves. âIt was weird. Itâs not like I havenât been with anyone in that way. ButâŚâÂ
He bites his tongue, holding back. âYouâre probably rightâŚâ His head nods mindlessly. âMaybe I do have feelings for⌠UhmâŚâ Nikolai purses his lips tightly. He does not want to say it. He still hopes that this lingering feeling is just a harsh breeze passing byâbut that breeze will only send chills all over his body.Â
âAt first she was so goddamn annoying and clingy. But I donât know⌠Maybe her naivete and the way she looks at me are making me feel weird, sorta. Sheâs kind, I give her that. Too kind, maybe. And sometimes⌠uhm, she does things that I likeâŚâ Nikolai cringes, scratching his head in restlessness. âDamn it, itâs just one month and a little bit more. And⌠Fuck. I have known you for more than one whole decade and I never get the feeling to sleep with you or anything but when itâs her, Iâm likeââ
âHold on now!â Viktor sits straight but his body is bouncing in excitement. He tries to speak but his mouth only spurts incoherences, akin to a football fan who experienced victory. He grabs Nikolaiâs arm, shaking it. âBro, that sounds like⌠You want to⌠heheheâŚâ
Nikolai blushes againâthe shades on his cheeks turn deeper redâbefore he buries his face into his arm. He groans but says nothing. Viktor only cackles, patting his back. âYou know what, I donât even blame you. Humans have desires. It just happened that your desires point in the same direction.âÂ
âRight⌠But listen, I donât intend to do anything about this⌠feeling I have. I still want to go to Peters⌠and do whatâs importantâŚâ Nikolai says. âMy feelings are just temporary. And⌠it is not like me to embrace it. If I do, Iâll just betray myself.â
Viktor only scoffs. âYeah, right.â
They sit in silence for a couple moments again, until both of their sodas are finished.
âHey, what do the loan sharks want to do with her?â Nikolai asks. Viktor shrugs his shoulders.
âSo, like we said before, sheâs most likely going to get trafficked. Loan sharks wonât kill their debtors but theyâre criminals just like we are. Theyâre going to do worse.â He replies. âMy best guess is sheâs most likely going to be forced to become a prostitute, or at least something like that. They probably will get her to work until she can fully repay the debt.â
âIs that why Nastasya doesnât like it?â
Viktorâs shadow of a smile drops instantly. He is overcasted with dull ashes. âYeah. I know she hates it.â
âI know Iâve told you how we met but it was never in detail, right?â Viktor takes a long drag of his cigarette. âWhen I went to the club, she was literally the most gorgeous woman I have ever seen. It felt like I just saw an angel who got displaced in Hell. I didnât even want to sleep with her, you know? I wanted to get close to her but I didnât know how so I paid for her âservicesâ.â He chuckles briefly. âShe just sat there on the bed and I wanted to kinda introduce myself. I wanted to show what I am, so I taught her how to do Python.â
âCringe,â Nikolai says.
âI just wanted her to see that Iâm a smart boy, alright?! And shush, Iâm being nostalgic.â Viktor pushes his index finger on Nikolaiâs lips, only for the latter to move his head away. âWell, I kept doing that for nights. Just went there to spend time with her. I was kinda broke at the time so I can only spend an hour or two.â He sighs.
âThen, she told me about herself. I was like âYes, fucking finally!â because it took a while for her to open up to me.â Viktor once again cackles to himself. âWonât really tell you much but she was basically forced to live that way. I felt so fucking angry. Every time she told me about what she had to deal with in that club, I thought to myself, âWhat should I do? What should I do with her?ââ
âSo I took the risk. I made a lot of âdangerousâ arrangements. A car, some fake but valid-looking documents, a safe place for her to live, a therapist to heal⌠Just things that will keep her away from harm, you know? Then I asked her if she wanted to leave. She did come with me and the rest is history.â Viktor ends his narration with a pleased smile. âAnd I think I am the luckiest man alive.â
Nikolai does not say anything. On one hand, he wonders why exactly Viktor told him that. On the other hand, he finds himself resonating with a tiny part of his tale. That same question Viktor asked himself also has been popping up in Nikolaiâs mind again and againâWhat should I do? What should I do with you?
He has been thinking of any possibly perfect solution for this conundrum since three days ago. You really do not have any reason to stay with him any longer. Your father died and the responsibility has unfairly dawned on you now. He does not know if the police are still searching for you but most likely they still are. You are a target of many.
Staying with you is just going to be damaging for him. He already left prison. He does not want to be under surveillance again because of his defiance to conform to the law and society standards. And though he is fairly certain he can defend himself against a crime syndicate group, he prefers to be lowkey and not be hunted. Anyone who is closely related to you will be in danger. It is the same cycle as how you are now in one because you are your fatherâs little girl.
âI think I need more time to think about this⌠about herâŚâ He says to Viktor.
âYou really just have two choices, Kolyushka. You want her gone, you let the loan sharks come. You want her to stay, well⌠maybe I can help a bit. Free of charge. Not like I havenât done it.â Viktor smiles but Nikolai finds that his last remark is a little too suspiciousâwhile also, undeniably quite appealing on a minuscule scale.
He decides to ignore that for now.
âAh, right. Iâm not here to just school you like a daddy would to his son. Come to send you special things, personally.â Viktor says before he finally reaches a suitcase he has been carrying all this time. Nikolaiâs eyes perk up, interested.
Viktor places the suitcase on his lap before unlocking it. Inside, there is a stack of papers, some laminated, some not. âWhat are those?â
âWhat are those? What is your brain doing? Thinking about the girl? Look closer!â Viktor shoves the suitcase towards him. Nikolai grumbles at his rude remark but accepts the suitcase anyway, placing it on his lap. He takes one of the papers.Â
âThis is⌠legal documents,â Nikolai murmurs.
âYeah, for your fake identity in Peters. Oh, and there is also a fake passport and an ID card, right at the bottom of these papers.â Viktor says. âI donât know if you wanted a fake driverâs license too because you will sell your current car, right? But I made one anyway.â
After a while of not smiling, Nikolai finally cracks one, looking at the documents, pleased. âGood⌠I can proceed now.â He says, mostly to himself. He looks up at Viktor. âThank you for this.â
âNo problem. But Iâll charge you extra.â
Nikolai frowns. âNow, now⌠I donât remember our deal about this stuff requires that.â
âYeah, me too. But I will charge you extra.â Viktor smirks ever so slightly. âFor another deal in advance.â
â âĄ
âTheyâre taking a whileâŚâ You murmur as you have been staring at the door, waiting for Viktor and Nikolai to return from their secret meeting. Nastasya turns her head to the door and only hums.
âI think itâs a good thing. Sometimes Nikolai needs a scolding.â She says before she leans to the couch, sighing. She grumbles slowly under her breath as she combs her hair with her fingers. âUgh⌠the cold air is really messing up my hair.â She huffs.
âIs that possible?â You ask.
âWell, it is possible, since my hair feels weird. I usually let it dry naturally but itâs getting long, so I have to use a hair dryer.â She replies. âUgh! Do you have a hairbrush I can borrow? And do not give me Nikolaiâs brush. I donât even understand how a dude has better hair than me. I bet he uses 3-in-1 head-to-toe body wash.â She whines.
âI do have a hairbrush. I got Nikolai to buy it for me several weeks ago⌠Wait a minute,â You get up from the couch and walk into the bedroom. You reach the drawer beside the bed, where you keep your personal belongingsâmost were bought by your kidnapper. The only thing that is truly yours is your baby blue purse and its contents.
You take a hairbrush from the drawer and a few more things before leaving the bedroom. You stand beside the couch, looking at distressed Nastasya. She opens her palm, waiting for you to place the hairbrush on it, but you just stare.
âHm?â She looks at you, confused.Â
âCan I braid your hair?â
âW-What?â
âUm, you look a little bothered about your hair⌠I think it would be nice to tie it⌠or braid it⌠Itâs totally okay if you donât want to, thoughâŚâ You give her a soft smile. âI think youâd look cute with a braid.â
âCute? You littleâŚâ Nastasyaâs eyes are gawking at you, perplexed. And you are just waiting for her answer, patiently standing there with a hair brush and a small pouch of hair ties. Your eyes are gazing at her, sparkling chaste.
âF-Fine⌠Make it quick.â
You gasp cheerily, moving to sit beside her on the couch before she adjusts her position so her back is facing you. Your nimble fingers start to trace and feel each of her black strands. âIâll brush your hair, okay? If I accidentally tug your hair⌠sorry!â You say cheekily. Nastasya just nods as her shoulder tenses.
With careful motion, you start to brush her hair gently. You can smell the scent of rose coming from her. Her hair is silky but quite dry, which is probably why she felt bothered earlier. There are also remnants of snowflakes on her hair, which you try your best to remove.
âYou know, when I was a child, my mom used to do my hair before school.â You say. âI used to get a little jealous of other girls who have cute hair, so I want one too. Usually, she either does braids or some cute ponytails.â You tell her as you brush the other section of her hair.
Nastasya is silent for a moment before she replies to you. âYou learnt to braid from her?âÂ
You shake your head, though she will not see it anyway. âMm-mm. I tried to do it on her hair but her hair at the time wasnât really suitable for a braid. And my attempts were always messy!â You giggle as you are reminiscing. âI always cross the wrong strands over and under the other. I want to try braiding my momâs hair to perfection one day but⌠well⌠you know.â
âMm-hm.â
âSo as I grow up, I practice on myself. It is very tiring, right? Braiding your own hair.â You say and Nastasya hums in agreement once again.
âAs you grow older, youâll just settle with a ponytail.â She remarks. You laugh softly in response, nodding.
âMayhaps,â You say. âSo after I master the art of braiding myself, I wanna try it on other people too. But I donât have a lot of friends, so I used to get ribbonsâoh, I used to work in a stationary shop, by the wayâand practice it that way.â
Nastasya scoffs. âMust be hard. Ribbons are different from hair. They're flat and thin, unlike a strand of hair.â She replies. You nod again.
âYeah⌠thatâs kinda the main problem⌠But I can try my best on you!â You grin as you part her hair into sections, enough to do double French braids. You lift your body a little, kneeling on the couch now.
âWhat colour of hair tie do you want?â You ask her.
âI donât care.â
âMmm, thatâs a hard answer. I am not good at choosing things for people.â You hum as your fingers fiddle in the pouch. âOkay, got them. Iâll start braiding your hair now. If it hurts⌠Uhm, donât get angry with me, please.â
âFine, fine, whatever.â
You chuckle before you start braiding her hair carefully. Your forehead frowns sometimes as you are focused on finishing a braid on one side. The hardest part is the beginning as you have to carefully get a strand little by little and tug her scalp a bit. You can hear Nastasyaâs deep exhale when you accidentally do it hard, but she does not complain or anything. To amend it, you will quickly pat her head as if it might soothe her.
You are halfway done after several minutes.
âWould you like to take a guess on what colour your hair ties are?â You strike a question. Nastasya seems to be snapped out of her thoughts as she tries to recall your abrupt query.
âWhat?â
âYour hair tieâs colour. Guess it.â You smile before you stick a mini butterfly clip on her braid.
âI feel like there is something else on meâŚâ
âYeah, some butterfly clips! Itâs actually one of my favourite clips because my mom used to put them a lot on my hair and sometimes on herself too. She even bought a huge pack that has a hundred pieces! Youâd look cute, I pinky promise.â You giggle. âAre you still guessing?â
âHuh? The hair tie? Uh⌠I donât know. I⌠Hm⌠Black, I guess.â
âBzz! Wrong. I chose white.â You say as your head tilts left and right in joy. Your fingers continue to tenderly and delicately crisscross her strands of hair, determined to finish the braids. You ramble on, âI chose white because I think it will give a little colour to your appearance. There is a logic here, listen, listen. You are always wearing black or dark-coloured stuff, so I think a little white here and there would give you more contrast, more gleam, as they say. You know, when I first saw you, I thought you were intimidating. I mean, your whole colour is bold and fierce. Iâm not saying thereâs anything wrong though! I⌠uh⌠well, speaking from a girl to another girl, I think white also suits you. I may be biased because I love achromatic colour but I think youâd look pretty in white too. Maybe youâll like it if I stick it on you here and here andââ
You stop talking when you notice something. The braid is already done, mini butterflies are clipped on some parts and the white hair tie is securing the braid nicely. But Nastasya is quietâno, she is burying her face in her palms, her shoulders shaking.
âN-NastasyaâŚ?â
Oh God, was I too annoying?
You shrink in your spot, feeling small once again. You hear Nastasyaâs long sigh and you swallow nervously. âUm, I can take them off if you don't like themâŚâ
âNo,â She says firmly. âNo, I was just⌠thinking about something. I wasnât mad at you or anything.â She adds before she takes a deep breath and turns her body towards you.
âReally?â You ask with a small timid voice. Before Nastasya could reply to you, the door opens from the outside. Both of you turn towards it as Viktor and Nikolai step inâone is jovial and another is sombre.Â
âNastyushka, my lady! Ahââ
Viktorâs jaw hangs low as he sees Nastasya. He then gasps dramatically, rushing towards her. âOh my, look at you! Youâre so⌠Ugh! Youâre so fucking cute!â He squeals as he carefully touches her braided hair.Â
Your timidity dissipates, changing to a smile towards Nastasya, as if you are saying âSee?â
âDid you do this?â Viktor asks you and you nod shyly. He grins, reaching out to pat your hair. âAw, you cheeky girl. You did so great. I love it.â He says. You only keep smiling sheepishly. As Viktor keeps pampering his lover with never-ending praises, your eyes trail to the quiet man in the room.Â
Nikolai is just staring at you. Once your eyes are fixated on him, he pulls away his gaze. He even pulls himself out of the living room as he retreats to the bedroom, closing the door.Â
âWell, I guess itâs your turn to talk to him now,â Viktor says. You look at him, slightly confused.Â
âWhat do I talk to him about?â
âOh, those questions will come up later. But Iâve done my best to discipline the fuck out of him.â Viktor grins at you. âDonât be too angry with him, okay? That dude has a multitude of issues. You just have to be patient, sometimes. Oftentimes. Every time.â
Your eyes lower down to the floor. âIâm not angry⌠Not anymore, reallyâŚâ You murmur. Truthfully, you were hurt at the fact that Nikolai did reveal your fatherâs location. You wanted to blame himâbut you could not, really. The morning after his drunk night is still fresh in your mind.Â
âFreedom, little dove. Iâm talking about free will. The power to make a choice for yourself, without influences from all over.â
âMust you cry? Were those little unimportant joys you felt no better than agony?â
In a way, you can understand his desperation to be relieved of emotions and burdensâyou want to create a justification for his action, but unless he says it himself, you cannot even fully convince yourself.Â
Viktor and Nastasya leave the house shortly after. You are left with your thoughts and the man in the room. You know you cannot just stay silent and wish the universe to fix everything for youâtalking to Nikolai and figuring things out is better than being quiet. You have been quiet for long enough.Â
Your talk with Nastasya did go wellâif you said so yourself. It was relieving to have someone who could mirror your conflicted feelings over your fatherâs death. You may not know the full extent of horrific things Nastasya had gone through, but her words alone were enough for you to pick up your puzzles and piece them together.Â
You get up. Your fingers are cold and you feel your nervousness rise once you approach the bedroom. Taking a few deep breaths to support yourself, you knock.Â
â âĄ
At this point, knocking has become Nikolaiâs worst nightmare.Â
He is lying on the bed, as still as a corpse, crafting possible answers he could muster if you ever drop a hard question. He thinks he does not get enough time and he feels his heartbeat rate is increasing to the maxâit is as if his heart is struggling to leap out his chest.Â
Ah, Iâm not ready. Sheâll ask me. She wonât ask me about her daddy. Sheâll ask me things. Other things.Â
He wants to shoutâGo away! Leave me and torment me no more!âBut even the thought of raising his voice towards you is already dimming the courageous fire that is barely lit. Instead, his fire shivers, smaller and smaller into cowardice as he watches the door creak open.Â
You peek inside, looking at him curiously. Nikolai only returns your gaze, still unmoving from the bed. âCan I come in?â You ask and he hums in an approving tone. A tiny smile tints on your face as you step in. You walk to the bed and Nikolai does not know what he expects you to do but definitely, he does not expect you to get on the bed as well, lounging beside him.Â
He thought his bravery would last long but your curious and blinking eyesâadorableâare too distracting. Irises emitting pristine, just enough to push his bravado back to the corner of his inner self. At that point, he just wants to kneel and say sorry again, for whatever he has done to you wrong.Â
âKolya, are you okay?â
âYou should ask yourself thatâŚâ
âI am okay nowâŚâ You give him a small smile. âI already ate too.âÂ
Nikolai nods awkwardly. âMm⌠thatâs goodâŚâ He says. His eyes are trying their best to look elsewhereâjust anywhere, except you. But when his vision is fixed on the crippled ceiling, he finds himself diverting his sight towards you instinctively, seeking something nice to see, something nice to probably hold.Â
You two are basking in silenceâthough, Nikolai does not find it uncomfortable. Perhaps the slightest as he is pondering over the questions you will ask him. But the more he glances at you, the more he sees that you are actually waiting for him to speak.
âWhat were you talking about with Nastasya?â He asks. You turn to him with a smile on your face.
âShe was⌠kinda helping me to process my feelings.â You say. âIt was confusing and I felt lost. Maybe God sent her to me to get my head straight again.â
âOr maybe itâs the other way around.â He replies nonchalantly, his eyes are still fixated on the ceiling.
âWhat do you mean?â
âNothing.â
Sensing that you may not get a clear answer from him, you look away. But Nikolai finally breaks away his stare from the crippling ceiling, mismatched irises attending to your features. âYou couldâve just spoken to me, you know?â
âI wanted to⌠itâs just I didnât know where to start.â You reply before you sigh and adjust your body. Slowly, you lower yourself to the spot next to him, lying right beside him as your hand cradles his arm.
Nikolai tenses. The familiar heat travels all over his nerves. His sensitivity peaks and he thinks he can perceive anythingâeverything. His nose is catching the hinting scent of your hair, his ears are begging more of your sweet plea and his eyes cannot break away.Â
âI felt all sorts of things and theyâre like roaming everywhere in my mind. I admit that⌠I kinda felt angry at you for a moment when you told me youâre the one who revealed my fatherâs locationâŚâ He feels the grip of your hand on his arm tightens. âFelt angry and disappointed for a moment. But then, I remembered what we had talked about before⌠About your freedom, your emotions andââ You sigh, leaning your forehead on his shoulder. âI want to trust you⌠I think your action was driven by a desperation to be free. SoâŚâ
âEnough,â Nikolai says. âMaybe youâre right, maybe not. I donât even know anymore. But I amâŚâ He pauses, biting his tongue before looking away. âIâm sorry.â
âI donât blame you. Donât blame yourself, please.â
âYour kindness will not get you far, sweetheart.â He murmurs under his breath, but it slips past your ears.
âWhat did you talk to Viktor about?â
âHuh?â
You grin at him and Nikolai almost scrunches his nose by how you look.
CuteâŚâhe thinks.
âAlright, I get it. Itâs only fair. You told me about your stuff with Nastasya and I shall tell you about Viktor.â Nikolai says. âWe were just talking about⌠um, my stuff. He came here to send me fake documents for my new identity⌠Itâs just some of my Petersburg stuff.â
âOhâŚâ You shift your head up at him. The proximity between you and him is extremely close right nowâreally, it is just the two of you lying down on the bed, he is as still as a log and you are as clingy as ivy. âCanât you just go as you are now?â
âNo, sweetheart. I was a convict and my name is still tied to a certain record that listed dangerous ability users. If I want to move around the globe freely, I have to assume the coat of another man.â He explains as he sighs. âTedious, but it is what it is.â
âThereâs a record of that?â You ask and he just nods. âIs that a bad thing or a good thing?â
Nikolai scoffs. âIâd say itâs a good thing for me. Itâs a boost of ego, I take it.â He smiles at you and you also beam, enjoying the rare sight of his little âinsignificantâ joy. âBut some people think itâs a bad thing. If the government knows you have the potential to be a threat to the nation, youâll be treated less than a stray dog. Thereâs a reason why a lot of people like me went into hiding after The Great War.â
âThe Great War⌠I feel like Iâve heard about it in schoolâŚâ You mumble, forehead creases as you try to recall bits of memories of your school days. âWere you⌠uh, participated in it? Involved? Affected?â
âI was twelve when the war ended.âÂ
âWhere was the war again?â
âNot here.â
âWhy are you being secretive?â You pout. Nikolai only gives you a sly smile but says nothing further. Unsatisfied that you may not be able to have answers, you let out a loud huff. âYou and your secretsâŚâ
âIâll tell you when the time is right,â Nikolai says.Â
âSo, when?â
âNot now,â He replies shortly. âI will keep secrets about that side of things, but I wonât if you ask me the questions you have been wondering all this time. I will speak truthfully, starting from this second.âÂ
âPromise?â
âYes, promise. Iâll be honest with stuff.â Nikolai says. He will be honest, but that does not mean he cannot omit important parts. It is not a lie if it is not told.Â
He could not see your face from this position, as you are almost tucked comfortably at his side. But you soon lift your body a little and roll to lay on your stomach, facing him. His hand instinctively raises, hovering over your face, longingly, for a second before his fingers twitchâsending back his common sense into him.Â
âWhat will happen to me?â You finally ask the big question. âThe loan sharks are coming for me now, rightâŚ? Thereâs no way they will let my fatherâs debt dissipate like thatâŚâ
â⌠Theyâre indeed coming for you. They did ask Viktor about you. But he hasnât replied to them yet.â Nikolai replies, his voice soft, just like his gaze on you.Â
âWhy?â
âSympathy, guilt,â Nikolai says. âHe has moral codes, you know? Not entirely heartless, that guy.âÂ
Your eyes waver to his hand that is hanging in the air, lost. âAnd then? Itâs not like they will just⌠let me go, right?â You murmur. âIâm gonna be taken by forceâŚâ Nikolai purses his lips, biting his lower one when he sees you become tense and shiverâyour eyes are getting slightly redder as seconds pass.Â
Nikolai surrenders.Â
His hanging hand caresses your cheek, his thumb rubbing the skin of your face. He can hear his heartbeat thump louder and louder when you nuzzle into his palmâlike a cat seeking warmth. Nikolai can feel the blush creeping in all over his body again when you hold his hand to keep it on youâsilently begging him to stay.Â
For a second, Nikolai wonders who really is the captive and the captor hereâbecause he sure knows that your glimmering irises, despite the tears, are capturing his attention right now.Â
âIâm scared⌠Iâm so scaredâŚâ You whimper weakly. âI donât have anyone else, Nikolai⌠I only have you.â
âI know.â
You look at him, with a certain hope. Your fingers slide down carefully, tightening around his wrist. âCan Iââ
âNo,â He cuts you off immediately. âYou wonât come with me to Petersburg. No one. Not even you.â
âBut itâs not safe for me hereââ
âI said no,â His tone hardens. âListen. I donât even plan to bring anyone to Petersburg. Every preparation I have done is only for me alone. So, no⌠I wonât bring you. I cannot.â He says. âBut Iâm not dumb enough to not be able to see that both Viktor and Nastasya really do not want the loan sharks to get to you. They will go to a great degree to get their money back and satisfy their hatred towards your dad. Horrible things will happen to a young girl like you, that is for sure. And neither of us will be safe for each other.â
âThatâs not true,â You retort back. âI feel the safest with youâŚâ
âRight now, maybe yes. But not in St. Petersburg. Not when Fyodor is around.âÂ
âWhy, is he that dangerous?â
âVery much, yes.â
Nikolai can see your mood drop instantly. His thumb slides down to the corner of your lips and lifts it up. His gesture is enough for your solemn to turn into an adorable pout at his half-assed attempt to break a smile out of you.Â
âThen⌠what will you do with me? Where will I go? To whom I should turn to?â
Nikolai stares at you for a few seconds. He knows asking himself to choose between letting you go or actually helping you only leads him to the second choice. He tried to delight himself with the possibility of you being gone, but his mind ended up to the worst-case scenario that might happen to youâand then delight is no more, only dismay.Â
âHave your heart and head ever pointed in the same direction?â
He tries to remember what direction they were pointing at when you asked that question that day. His eyes glance at you, seeking his answer back then. Both of his mismatched eyes land precisely on your lips.Â
Ah right⌠I wanted to kiss you.Â
Nikolai sighs internally. He feels dumb.Â
âNikolai?â You call him as your hand caresses his hand as if it is a source of comfort for you.Â
âYeah, wait. Iâm thinking.â
âOkay⌠Youâre quite a thinker.â
âThe hell is that supposed to mean?â
You only chuckle briefly but your smile does not last longâyour sun is too shaded. He understands whyâyou were and are dealing with a lot of things at once. Girls your age should be in college, arguing in a group project and studying for a surprise mock examânot lounging on the same bed as their kidnapper, holding his hand and pouring naive affection.Â
Nikolai sighs againâinternally, of course. He does not want you to think badly about himâwell, not that it matters⌠right? Not that he cares. Not that he likes you or anything. Not that his affection has grown a tad too big that he dreams of your lips sometimes. Not that his desire boils itself too high when sometimes he hopes the night he lays his head on your chest repeats again. Not that his yearning is tickled over and over when he recalls the moment you hug and cry against him.
âIâll find a way. To help.â He finally says. The longer he ponders over his choices, the clearer his answer is. The first choice only brings havoc between his head and heart, but the other is agreed upon immediately. His feelings are not in shambles if he keeps thinking about his second choice. Matter of fact, he feels good.Â
Extremely good.Â
He feels disappointed thoughâthis decision is not made by his own free will, is it? His empathy, guilt and feelings towards you lead him to this point. He is being led by something elseâa force he wants to break free from.Â
But those emotions are a part of him. He cannot just escape from himself. He cannot steal him from himself. If he doesâthen death will offer its hand to him.Â
âYouâll help me?â You ask. Then, you scoot closer, offering a pinky finger. âReally? Promise? Honest?âÂ
Nikolai scoffs. He pulls his hand away from your face only to link his pinky with yours. âThere. Promise. Satisfied now? Are we on good terms now?â
You giggle and it brings Nikolaiâs deep chuckle out tooâhe does not really understand why but your sweet adorable giggle certainly has a charming melody in it, chanting radiance to anyone, including him apparently.Â
Ah, he lied. He knows exactly why he acted so.Â
âI have another question. Will you answer it honestly? No lying, no hiding?â
âYeah, yeah, whatever you want, little dove.â He replies nonchalantly before he retracts his finger from you. You tilt your head, looking at him expectantly.Â
âWhy do you help me?â
Nikolaiâs lips part slightly, stopping himself from blurting out the words out of his heart. He looks uncertain and the only thing he does as a response is shake his head.Â
It is not a lie if it is not told.Â
Šcherikolya 2024 â do not copy, plagiarize and repost my works to any platform, reblogs are very appreciated
if you like my works, consider buy me a ko-fi!
Hes just out of his mind in love with you!
Today's Sigma is: praising(?) nikolai
I completely forgot to post here...so...Jellyfish Sigma i guess!!!!
CONTENT WARNING : this fic series will contain DARK content , smut , age gap (reader is mid-late 20s while Nikolai is in his 30s) , probably inaccurate detective work descriptions , and religious themes. this does not follow canon and it is a non ability AU
chapter warnings : suggestive themes (angry sex gets mentioned once)Â ; firearm
A detective.
Thatâs what you are.
Or well, thatâs what you were. You had left that life behind you, swore on it. You werenât a terrible detective by any means, quite the opposite. You were notably the smartest detective in your city. Sharp and witty, reliable and smart. Thatâs what you prided yourself on. But with making bigger shoes, you made yourself nearly look like a clown when you stepped out of them. All it took was one case, one case to make you step down.
And like that, you were out of the game.
With no interest to push yourself forward in your career, you sidelined yourself much to everyoneâs dismay. You had people relying on you, people who needed you. But a normal life is what you desired after what felt like an action film that lasted forever. Itâs what you deserved.
You didnât lose all that much like you expected though. People still respected you for what you did, your ex-coworkers still treated you like their own, they still come to you for advice and you gave them your best. You became a mentor for younger detectives, a rowdy but loveable group who wanted to follow your footsteps.
You were content with the life you led. All trauma considered, youâd say youâre doing pretty solid for what youâve been through going through cases.
You were happy for once, you were content with this domestic life youâve made for yourself.Â
"Someone tells me youâre sick of old games. Letâs play a new one. =)"
You repeated the note left on your window to your ex-work partner, Mikhail, on the phone. Staring at it with furrowed brows, you cursed to yourself. "I quit this shit for a fucking reason." With a groan, you slam yourself back down on the couch.Â
"Did you check security cameras?" Mikhail questioned, groaning along with you. Heâs been by your side since your guysâ first day together, two peas in a pod. You still remember the days where you were just young rookies together. You guys werenât Sherlock Holmes and Watson by any means, but some might argue that your dynamic duo could come close.
Your face fell into a deadpanned expression, "You really think I wouldnât?"
"Hey, Iâm just trying to make sure we covered all bases. But knowing you, you probably already did that so I guess it was a stupid questionâ which is besides the point though." You could tell that he was just at a lost as you are.
"Misha, I wanted to leave this stuff behind me." You said, a little more solemnly than youâd liked to admit. "I thought after I faded out in the system for a bit, things would be okay for me. Sure, weâve made our enemiesâ"
"You especially."
"Yes, me especially. But I know that most of them are in prison and the others are respectable enough to do this stuff to my face instead of⌠whatever the fuck that is. I wanted out."
"And you will be out. One day, I promise you." Mikhail reassures, his usual lighthearted tone softening. "Do you think it could be the same guy from our last case together?" He asks.
And you wished you had an answer. The last case you ever took on as an official detective left you in pieces that youâre still trying to pick up to this day. There were too many missing factors but so many were coming to a horrific realization. There were no hints one moment and then the next, there were. Each step closer you thought you took, set you 10 paces back with little time to catch up. That case had flipped your life upside down and around. Like some sick cycle.Â
If it was the same bastard behind that case, you were sure that the old you wouldâve jumped at the chance.
But you arenât the person you were in the past, and you havenât been for a long time.
Maybe this was exactly what the guy wanted, what they came here for. To wait for things to get calm till they could hit hard again. Or maybe, there was a chance that this note couldâve come from a new, completely different person. Someone who wanted to take out an old big shot to make themselves look even bigger. There was just too many open spaces with a huge gap of no information. It could be anything from anyone.
"I donât know Misha, with the little to no info right now⌠it literally could be anyone." You admitted, not trying to even hide the defeat in your voice. Your brain searching, scanning, and recalling for anyone that stood out to you in your life. Someone who would mess with you like this, taunting from afar. It hits you like cold water in the morning. "Oh my god. What if itâs my ex?"
"You think you got yourself caught up in like a weird crazy ex revenge situation? What was the guyâs name again?" Mikhail questioned.
"Nikolai. Nikolai Gogol." You responded, rubbing at your temple. Fuck, if it really was NikolaiâŚ
But that was so long ago, way before your last case. And that relationship was never going to last, the both of you knew that. You wanted different things, you two were differentâŚit wouldnât have worked out. Maybe he wanted Bonnie and Clyde, turn you away from the so called righteousness and justice that is detective work. Live out a life of crime. You never were aware of what he did for work, you were able to tell it was dangerous. And maybe in another life, he was able make you his Bonnie.Â
You made sure that this wasnât that life.
Thinking back to all the times youâve spent with him makes your heart has plunge into your stomach. You were aware that he wasnât the greatest person to date. You said through heated kisses and angry sex that it was just the rush, the thrill of it all in the relationship you had with him that kept you around. Each time he could only laugh in your face. All his talk about freedom definitely added a new perspective to your life, but it was so extreme.Â
And oddly enough when you wanted to end it, he was very much less than pleased even though thatâs all heâs ever wanted. To be free. Heâs a walking contradiction though and he left your life without a trace. You refused to look back.
It wouldnât make sense to mess up your life now.
âŚ.
When did he ever make sense?
"Iâll check in with the database, see what I can scoop up on him." Mikhail attempts to reassure you, though it does little to soothe your thoughts. He never knew about the complexity of your relationship with Nikolai. Just that it was strange. He didnât know how dangerous he was.
But you werenât about to tell him right now, not while it felt like someone was watching you. "OkayâŚ"
"Did you ask your neighbors if they saw anything? What about that one neighbor across from you?" Mikhail suggested. "Take a picture of the note and Iâll drop by with some of the team by your place so we can investigate more. Better to not tamper with evidence so just use the picture to show your neighbors."
"Okay, yeah Iâll do that." You agreed, it wasnât a bad idea. "Thank you Misha."
"Iâll be there in about fifteen. Go chat with your neighbors. Donât die."
"Trying not to." You chuckled, hanging up the phone. You stood back up from the couch, looking at the window with disdain. The note was still there, staring back at you. Though you knew nothing was confirmed, you tried to find any hints of Nikolaiâs presence. The only thing sticking out to you was the smiley, and that wouldnât be viable evidence of anything. You shook your head, opening the camera app on your phone and snapping a picture.Â
Now  that was done and over with. Time to talk to your neighbor.
Your neighbor was a relatively tall and attractive man you would say. Youâve never talked to him before, only seeing him for a brief moment when you walk to your car or when he goes out. Your window allows you a somewhat good view outside. Though you could also say that his appearance did make him stand out too.Â
Tossing on a jacket, you hoped your neighbor wouldnât judge too hard if you were in your pajamas. It was still early in the morning when you woke up to that note.Â
You bite your tongue, you shouldnât leave the house unarmed. Taking a quick trip back to your room, you put on your belt that you wear to do your mentor work. The one thatâs meant to hold your firearm. You grab your gun in your drawer to put in your holster.
You opened the door, shivering a bit as the cool air hits your skin and hugged yourself tighter. Whoever put that note there must be really motivated to mess with you because who on earth would put a stupid note on a window when itâs this cold?
Taking a couple of steps towards his door, you placed a firm knock. You really hoped he was here. It would be an even shittier day if he wasnât and you were waiting out in the cold longer than you needed to be. But thankfully, the door opens.
"May I help you?" The rich Russian accent caught you off guard, making you blink in surprise. You werenât sure what to expect when he did speak but it wasnât that.Â
You gave the man an apologetic smile, "Hi Iâm so sorry to bother you early this morning but I was wondering if you had heard anything strange late at night or earlier in the morning? Or if you had seen anything weird?"
The man looks down at you for a moment and you could tell he was studying you. His eyes were probably the most vibrant shade of a deep purple hue that you had ever seen before. You couldnât tell what he was thinking, he had a good poker face you had to admit. He only tilts his head to the side, looking concerned. "I had not heard anything out of the ordinary. I usually am not here all that often because of work, but when I am here, I like to stay in my bedroom and rest."
He sounded genuine, and he definitely looked genuine. But those years youâve spent as a detective grew your skills, and youâve kept them sharp. You wouldnât have been earnestly praised highly as a detective if you werenât good at catching onto the small things. A blessing and a curse. There was something off about this neighbor of yours that you couldnât place your finger on.
You couldnât let him know that though, so you only shook your head again and waved your hand. "Ah, Iâm so sorry again then. There was just a note left on my window and I was just wondering if anyone saw anything. Itâs okay, thank you for your time."
"That sounds terrible, forgive me if Iâm overstepping but are you certain it wasnât your roommate playing some sort of prank?"
âŚâŚ
You could feel the gears in your head pause abruptly. You blink at him in confusion.
Roommate?Â
"I donât have a roommate?" You clarified, raising a brow at his comment. But he only reciprocates your confused expression.
"Is that so? I was sure you did. There was this man Iâve seen at your place before quite often whenever Iâm here." He tells you, and your mind goes into a frenzy. What the fuck was he talking about? Was he talking about Mikhail?Â
"Iâm sorry, could you explain more?" You kept your tone polite, and it was obvious you werenât expecting this. You were too distracted by the thoughts swirling in your head that you didnât realize that you were shaking a bit from the weather.
"Here, you should come inside. I have some tea prepared for myself but thereâs enough to share. Iâll tell you what I know. Part of it is that itâs bad manners to keep a guest outside in the cold." He opens the door more, stepping out of the way.Â
Jesus, you really did want to stop being dragged into these games.
HELLOO I HAVE COME TO SPREAD THE SILLY CLOWN AGENDA!!
Damn I havenât read or watched bsd in a long time last time I watched Fyodor died is he still dead?
Anyways I have no idea why but this guy is so fun to draw really hope I can find more silly clown outfits to draw him in soon
this one did numbers on tt